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Forced migration, oceanic humanitarianism, and the paradox of danger and saviour of a Vietnamese refugee boat journey

Damousi, Joy
Nelli, Filippo
Nguyen Austen, Anh
Toffoli, Alessandro
Tomsic, Mary
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Abstract
The ocean is a central site of escape, danger, and rescue for refugees. It is also a place where oceanic humanitarianism is enacted. In histories of refugee migration, the combination of the ocean, weather, and climate in determining the fate of refugees has not been adequately examined. This article provides a critical analysis of a Vietnamese refugee boat journey in 1982, to demonstrate the paradoxical nature of the ocean as both a site of danger and saviour. Conventional historical methodologies alone cannot capture the complex role of the ocean and the weather in determining boat refugee journeys and rescues. Interdisciplinary research between historians and ocean engineers provides new evidence and understanding of how the ocean and weather influences the outcomes of refugees seeking asylum by boat. Numerical model predictions of sea state and ship motion – which enables the vessel's journey in past environmental conditions to be understood – integrated within historical analysis contributes to a fuller and more complex understanding of the nexus between environmental conditions and forced migration journeys. Ocean engineering produces a scientific narrative that historians can use, alongside oral histories and other sources, to theorize the ocean as an active agent.
Keywords
Date
2022
Type
Journal article
Journal
The Historical Journal
Book
Volume
65
Issue
2
Page Range
505-526
Article Number
ACU Department
School of Arts and Humanities
Faculty of Education and Arts
Institute for Humanities and Social Sciences